Profile Perfect Level 326 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 23, 2026
If you only need the result for Level 326, you'll find it below. The walkthrough after that explains every step. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 326 Answer
I’ll start with the solved grid so you can see the final result, then walk through every clue that locks it in.
| Subject | Head Shape | Color | Sound | Current Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clock A | Bonnet | Beige | Bell | 08:30 |
| Clock B | Flat | Black | Bird | 22:00 |
| Clock C | Split Pediment | Brown | Wind Chime | 14:00 |
Profile Perfect Level 326 Hints And Walkthrough
This level gives you three antique clocks—Clock A, Clock B, and Clock C—each with a head shape, a color, a sound, and a current time. No starting answers are locked in, but the clues are very direct. Most of them link two or three cells at once, so the solve moves quickly once you know where to begin. I’ll take you step by step through the deductions.
Step 1: Lock in Clock B’s head shape and sound with Clues 1 and 5
Clue 1 says Clock B’s head shape is simpler than the others. That’s a direct placement: Clock B has a Flat head. A few clues later, Clue 5 says Clock B echoes a rare Bird sound, and it links back to the same head shape (Flat) while also adding the sound. So right away I can fill in two cells for Clock B:
- Head Shape: Flat
- Sound: Bird
That’s a solid start—two of Clock B’s four traits are already known.
Step 2: Use Clue 3 to place the times for Clock B and Clock C
Clue 3 tells us that Clock C shows a time outside breakfast hours. It directly links Clock C’s time to 14:00 and Clock B’s time to 22:00. That confirms Clock B’s time as 22:00 and Clock C’s time as 14:00. We don’t have Clock A’s time yet, but it will be the only remaining value once we finish.
Also, Clue 2 mentions that clocks not showing night time are not neighbors. Night time here is 22:00 (Clock B), so Clock A (still unknown time) and Clock C (14:00) are not night. That means Clock A and Clock C are not next to each other. Since there are only three clocks in a row, that forces Clock B to sit between them. This neighbor logic doesn’t fill any cells, but it’s a nice check that the times are consistent.
Step 3: Clue 4 confirms Clock C’s color and ties it to the time
Clue 4 says Clock C is varnished, highlighting its beautiful colors. That gives us Clock C’s color directly: Brown. It also repeats the time 14:00, which we already have. So now Clock C has:
- Time: 14:00
- Color: Brown
Step 4: Clue 7 adds Clock C’s head shape and gives Clock A’s color
Clue 7 says the Split Pediment clock is out of order and stuck at afternoon. That’s Clock C (afternoon being 14:00), so its head shape is Split Pediment. The clue also links to Clock A’s color, telling us that the Beige clock is referenced in the same sentence. So Clock A’s color becomes Beige.
Now Clock C has three traits filled: head shape, color, and time. Only its sound is missing.
Step 5: Clue 8 gives Clock A’s sound and rules out a sound for Clock C
Clue 8 says the Brown clock does not play a sound usually heard in weddings. The Brown clock is Clock C, so it can’t play Bell (the classic wedding sound). Instead, the clue gives Clock A’s sound as Bell. So I fill Clock A’s sound as Bell. That also eliminates Bell as a possibility for Clock C’s sound, but we’ll get to that next.
Step 6: Fill the remaining cells by elimination
We’ve placed everything except:
- Clock A’s head shape
- Clock B’s color
- Clock C’s sound
- Clock A’s time
Let’s list the values already used:
Head shapes: Flat (B), Split Pediment (C) → only Bonnet left for Clock A.
Colors: Beige (A), Brown (C) → only Black left for Clock B.
Sounds: Bird (B), Bell (A) → only Wind Chime left for Clock C.
Times: 14:00 (C), 22:00 (B) → only 08:30 left for Clock A.
That fills the entire grid. Clue 6 (Beige clock not next to Brown) is already satisfied because Clock A and Clock C are separated by Clock B, exactly as the neighbor logic from Clue 2 predicted. Every clue has been used, and the answer table above is the final solution.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 326
Clue 2: “Clocks not showing night time are not neighbors”
This clue can be confusing because it doesn’t explicitly say what “night time” is. In the puzzle, Clock B shows 22:00, which is clearly night. The other two clocks show 08:30 (morning) and 14:00 (afternoon), so they are not night. The phrase “not neighbors” then implies that Clock A and Clock C are not adjacent. If they aren’t adjacent, the only way to arrange three clocks in a row is with Clock B in the middle. That’s a positional deduction that doesn’t fill a cell but confirms the order, which helps later when Clue 6 also talks about neighbors.
Clue 3: “Clock C shows a time outside breakfast hours”
The tricky part here is that the clue links two cells: Clock C’s time and Clock B’s time. At first glance you might think it only applies to Clock C, but the linked cells show both 14:00 and 22:00. That means the clue is telling us those two times are outside breakfast hours, while Clock A’s time (08:30) is presumably breakfast. The takeaway is to note that this clue gives us two time placements at once, not just one.
Clue 7: “Split Pediment clock is out of order and stuck at afternoon”
This one is straightforward in content, but it links two different traits for the same clock (head shape and time) plus an unrelated detail about Clock A’s color. Players might overlook that the color mention for Beige is actually giving us Clock A’s color, not just describing the Split Pediment clock. Always read the linked cells carefully—if a clue lists more than one cell, each one is a confirmed value.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 326 is a clean solve because almost every clue gives you two or three pieces of information at once. The key was recognizing that Clue 1 and Clue 5 together lock in Clock B’s head shape and sound, and from there the times and colors cascade into place. The neighbor clues didn’t fill cells, but they provided a nice consistency check to make sure the arrangement made sense. If you ever get stuck on a similar level, remember to look for clues that connect multiple traits to the same subject—they’re the fastest way to narrow down the grid.
Stuck again later? Return to our level guide page for more answers and walkthroughs. If you have comments, suggestions, or feedback, leave them below. Good luck!
Thanks, — Liam

Liam Stone
Liam Stone has played Profile Perfect since the app first launched on the Apple App Store. He spotted its potential early, and that early bet turned into hundreds of hours spent solving levels, testing clue logic, and documenting answers for other players. Liam runs the YouTube channel Puzzle Game Answer where his puzzle walkthroughs have earned over 935,000 views and a growing community of more than 800 subscribers. He covers a wide range of mobile puzzle games beyond Profile Perfect, giving him firsthand experience with how these games design clues, structure levels, and trip up even experienced players. Every guide on this site reflects that hands on experience. Liam plays each level himself, verifies every answer against the in game grid, and rewrites confusing clues into plain language so you don't need to guess. If you want more of his walkthroughs, subscribe to his channel.
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